

In the car, Tommy makes Greg an interesting offer the day before his film's production: Tommy wants Greg to star in The Room as Mark, a character who betrays Tommy's lead character, Johnny. Wiseau then drives himself and Sestero from the restaurant at a mere 20 miles per hour in his Mercedes. Wiseau then racks up a huge bill, barely tips the waiter, and storms out of the restaurant in traditional Tommy Wiseau fashion. It’s a biography recounting Sestero’s time in Los Angeles while working on the film The Room, a movie that although its box office income of less than 2,000, has absolutely soared in popularity in recent decades. Two girls come over to the table, introducing themselves and flirting accordingly, and Wiseau - who speaks in broken English - insults them viciously and hilariously in a French(ish) accent. The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made is a nonfiction book co-written by Tom Bissell and Greg Sestero.

For example, Tommy's hair is long and unkempt, he wears outdated clothes with two (yes, two) belts on his pants, and he drinks glasses of hot water with every meal. Sestero spends the majority of this chapter detailing Wiseau's all-around strangeness. Sestero explains that Wiseau wrote, directed, produced, cast, and starred in the film - a true passion project. Cult filmmaker Tommy Wiseau and his costar from his film The Room, Greg Sestero, join their onscreen Disaster Artist counterparts, brothers James and Dave. Filming of Wiseau's film, The Room, starts the following day. The opening chapter of Sestero's book introduces us to Tommy Wiseau, the eccentric filmmaker himself, as he treats his friend, Greg Sestero, to a celebratory dinner at Hollywood's Palm Restaurant. Learn about Tommy Wiseau and the best bad movie ever made in a fraction of the time it takes to read the actual book!
